Necessity of stainless steel frets/refretting

T-800

New member
So for some context, I'm looking at a barely played basically brand new guitar. If I do purchase this guitar, it will be one of 4 guitars I own and I plan on buying 3 more guitars for a total of 7 guitars.

I am not a professional or working musician and I don't plan on playing the same guitar everyday or maybe even playing everyday at all.

As such, do you think it's necessary for me to go for stainless steel frets?

The guitar I'm looking at differs very little from another similar candidate but the price difference is very big. The other more expensive candidate has stainless steel frets (vs regular frets on the cheaper one) and a swamp ash body (vs alder). They both have a hss configuration with SD pickups, with the expensive one coming with a pegasus bridge and the cheaper one coming with a custom 5 bridge. The bridge humbucker is not a big/deciding factor for me as it can be easily and relatively cheaply switched out. (although I am leaning towards the custom 5 and as such may switch out the pegasus if I go for the expensive one)

Thoughts?

I figure if I become a working musician and get the cheaper one, I'll be able to easily afford refretting or buying a new guitar anyway should the need arise; if I buy the cheaper non stainless steel fret guitar.
 
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Stainless is really for guys that either have a strong grip (which they shouldn't on guitar), or play so much professionally they are wearing down the frets and can't keep the guitar playing in tune and setup without buzz, etc.

I'd go by specs of what you want to play / sound like. Ash will be brighter. Pegasus hotter. Custom 5 is a great all around do-anything pickup. The other things to look at are hardware, what kind of tuners, bridge, etc.
 
Go for the cheaper one. I love SS frets, but I play shows all the time, and they last longer. I wouldn't care if I wasn't playing so much. Also, the Custom 5 is a great pickup.
 
Stainless is really for guys that either have a strong grip (which they shouldn't on guitar), or play so much professionally they are wearing down the frets and can't keep the guitar playing in tune and setup without buzz, etc.

I'd go by specs of what you want to play / sound like. Ash will be brighter. Pegasus hotter. Custom 5 is a great all around do-anything p ickup. The other things to look at are hardware, what kind of tuners, bridge, etc.

thank you for the reply!


other than the colourway and the expensive one POSSIBLY having scalloped frets from frets17-24; the differences I've already listed are the only differences. I've never tried and therefore am not used to scalloped frets anyway so it isn't like I know what I'm going to be missing out on. I like hearing that the custom 5 is a lot more versatile, I don't want this guitar to be a one trick pony.
 
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Go for the cheaper one. I love SS frets, but I play shows all the time, and they last longer. I wouldn't care if I wasn't playing so much. Also, the Custom 5 is a great pickup.

thank you for the reply!

yes, from what I've heard with samples and read with descriptions, it sounds like what I want.
 
Stainless frets arent that expensive on guitars anymore

Many of the budget guitars have them now
For under $500


I have several with Stainless frets and not one was over $500

The three most expensive guitars i have didnt come with Stainless frets

I started playing on cheap acoustics
I have a death grip on the neck

I was pushing my Ibanez sharp when i played it

I havent had any trouble with frets wearing out

Not a professional or everyday player either

My professional friends played four to five hours a day/ 6 days a week
it took years to create wear

i don't see Stainless as an upcharge
 
There's another reason for the stainless steel frets... If you've got a guitar that you're going to keep for a long time... I've got an SG that I've had for 30 plus years... It is not one of my prime gigging guitars, but upper fretts are gouged because it's one of my favorite home guitars, and it's so much fun to get up that neck.

Ss really wasn't an option in the old days but it is an advantage if its played a lot, either by gigging or just holding on to it.
 
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Regular frets are fine if (if!) they are of good quality, however with stainless now coming on mid-level production models it is hard to pass up, even if the models are a couple hundred more.

Are you looking at Schecter models? My last two have been Schecters with stainless, but those were purchased just before the panicdemic and inflation boom.
 
SS frets used to be a premium option on very expensive instruments, but it is trickling down to lower price points now...sort of like roasted maple and locking tuners.
 
normal frets will last a long time with moderate use and if you need a refret eventually, you can go with ss down the road. if that and the pup are the significant differences, if get the cheaper one
 
Stainless is really for guys that either have a strong grip (which they shouldn't on guitar), or play so much professionally they are wearing down the frets and can't keep the guitar playing in tune and setup without buzz, etc.

Heavy strings and higher action both tend to increase fret wear as well. Bends are much nicer on stainless steel frets too - SS stays polished where regular frets tarnish quickly and drag the string. Stainless steel frets are better in every way than regular frets - the only reason to go for the latter is if you can't afford SS.
 
Regular frets are fine if (if!) they are of good quality, however with stainless now coming on mid-level production models it is hard to pass up, even if the models are a couple hundred more.

Are you looking at Schecter models? My last two have been Schecters with stainless, but those were purchased just before the panicdemic and inflation boom.

Ltd. Both are the same model actually, just from different years. The expensive one with ss frets is a later model and brand new, the cheaper one without ss frets is older and used but in great condition.
 
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